EU Enlargement, Parallel Trade and Price Competition in Pharmaceuticals. What's to Blame? Derogation or Perception?
Abstract
Given the cost of trade and availability of pharmaceuticals, the driving force for parallel trade is the price difference between the source (exporting) and the destination (importing) country. An increase in the price difference or in the availability of pharmaceuticals for parallel trade should increase price competition in the destination country. Using 2003-2007 data from Sweden we investigated whether EU enlargement in 2004, when new countries with low pharmaceutical prices joined the EU, increased competition from parallel imports. Drugs facing competition from parallel imports are found to have on average 17% to 21% lower prices than they would have had if they had never faced such competition. But, contrary to expectation, EU enlargement is not found to have increased this effect, which might be explained by derogations and changes in consumer perceptions of parallel imports.
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Date
2011-05Author
Granlund, David
Köksal, Miyase Yesim
Keywords
EU enlargement
parallel trade
pharmaceuticals
price competition
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
499
Language
eng